Happy as the Grass Was Green

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Happy as the Grass Was Green
Directed by Charles Davis
Screenplay byCharles Davis
Story byCharles Davis, based on a
story of Merle Good
Starring Graham Beckel
Pat Hingle
Geraldine Page
Production
company
Burt Martin Associates Production
Release date
  • December 1973 (1973-12)
Running time
105 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Happy as the Grass Was Green, later renamed Hazel's People, is a 1973 American drama film directed by Charles Davis and starring Geraldine Page, Pat Hingle and Graham Beckel. The film is one of the few Mennonite related films ever made.

Contents

Most of the cast other than the aforementioned consists of genuine Pennsylvanian Mennonites. The film is based on a novel by Merle Good. For many years, the film was presented nightly at the "People's Place" in Intercourse, Pennsylvania. The Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online states: "The two films Amish Grace and Happy as the Grass was Green have significant insider Mennonite contributions and come closest to presenting a valid image of Amish and Mennonites". [1] [2] [3]

The original title of the film is taken from the poem Fern Hill of Dylan Thomas.

Plot

A Mennonite family's son is shot to death by police at an unnamed New York university while protesting the Vietnam War. His brother and another college student, Eric Mills, portrayed by Graham Beckel, go to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, stay on the family farm and attend his funeral. Once Mills arrives in the small town, he connects with the simple lifestyle there and discovers the Christian faith of the Mennonites. In the end, he decides to go back to the "world" instead of joining the small, religious community, in order to work on improving injustice, that now he could approach in a new way.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Plain people</span> Simple lifestyle Christians

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Merle Good is an American author and publisher born in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. He is best known for his 1971 novel Happy as the Grass was Green, an important work of American Mennonite literature, which was adapted into the film Hazel's People.

References